Monday, December 18, 2017

How to automatically mute a website

How to automatically mute a website within Google Chrome, forever
Annoying autoplaying videos might still appear, but Chrome 64 ensures that you won't have to listen to them


If you’re the type of person who detests autoplaying video ads with sound, Google’s Chrome provides some help. The beta of Google Chrome 64 allows you to mute a site permanently, so even if a video pops up—and Chrome can block some of those, too!—it won’t blow you out of your seat. The feature is expected to roll out to the general public sometime in January. 

Google’s Chrome 64 beta ships with a stronger popup ad blocker, which automatically prevents some dodgy ads from either appearing or re-routing you to other sites on the web. But it also applies some site-by-site controls, so that when you visit a website, you have better control of what media to allow and disallow.

All of the per-site controls reside within the padlock (‘Secure”) icon to the very left of the URL bar. Somewhat ironically, Chrome has actually been paring down the granularity of per-site controls from Chrome 62 to the current Chrome 63, and on to the beta of Chrome 64: You used to be able to specify whether a site could use your microphone or play MIDI music, for example. Chrome 63 reduced the available options to items like Flash and cookie controls, while Chrome 64 lists only three controls you can specify: Flash, popup ads, and sound. For whatever reason, Chrome 64 is the first time you can specify per-site audio settings. 

Using the new settings, Chrome now allows you to specify, on a per-site basis, whether to allow or block (or mute) flash and audio, or simply default to the global settings you may have already applied. Naturally, this doesn’t necessarily block the video from playing, just automatically mutes it.

Because of the various solutions website operators to use to play video, Chrome appears to block some popup video (video that appears within an article), and not others. Video on the Bloomberg site played, for example, though a popout video (video that hovers over an article) on CNET.com was blocked. 

The new Chrome will also prevent what Google calls “abusive experience” ads from unexpectedly redirecting you to another location. So-called iframes that redirect users to another page will be blocked by Chrome 64, and the browser will notify you of the page’s attempt to redirect you. In the next version of Chrome, Chrome 65, links that open the desired destination in a new tab—then redirect the current page to a new, unwanted location—will also be blocked, and users will be notified.

Why this matters: Google’s ovearching premise is that ads should be “friendly” to the user. Naturally, it has an axe to grind: The bulk of the company’s revenue still derives from its AdSense ads, which are designed to permit them to be viewed by users. Still, most of us remember the now-departed, annoying “punch the monkey!” Flash ads from yesteryear. Abusive video advertising and popups will be the next to fall.


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